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War Costs Spiral Out of Control

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted October 24, 2007.


In the name of our troops, Bush demanded another $46 billion from Congress to finance the war in Iraq -- and the Democrats will probably give it to him.
Robert Scheer

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Hey, a billion here, a billion there, who's counting? Not the State Department, which admitted this week that it can't say "specifically what it received" for the $1.2 billion it paid DynCorp, ostensibly to train the Iraqi police -- other than that somebody got an Olympic-size swimming pool out of the deal.

On Monday, President Bush demanded that Congress fork over $46 billion more to pay for his wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, insisting that it be approved by the end of the year. That brings the total requested this year in "supplementary funds" for his foreign adventures to $196.4 billion, and the prez said Congress had better pony up or it will be betraying the family of the dead Marine that he was using as prop for this particular White House photo op.

Of course the Democrats, after some pussyfooting, will sign off, as they have for the rest of the more than $800 billion that will have been allotted for the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts by year's end, lest they be accused of failing the troops that Bush has put in harm's way. "Our men and women on the front lines should not be caught in the middle of partisan disagreements in Washington, D.C.," Bush warned darkly, while edging ever closer to the family of the fallen Marine. "I often hear that war critics oppose my decisions, but still support the troops," he said. "Well, I'll take them at their word -- and this is the chance to show it."

I half-expected some leading Democrat to respond: "Hey, you want support for the troops, I'll see your $46 billion and raise you another $46 billion." But then again, Joe Lieberman is no longer running the party. Instead, the Democrats tried to show that $46 billion is not loose change and that, as Nancy Pelosi put it, a mere 40 days of the cost of the Iraq war could provide annual health insurance coverage for 10 million American children. Harry Reid added that the money might be better spent for law enforcement, homeland security and fixing the sagging infrastructure, but his argument isn't going to get any better traction than Pelosi's. As Reid pointed out, "this intractable civil war in Iraq ... is being paid for by borrowed money."

Sure, some day the Chinese communists and others holding our debt will have to be paid back with compounded interest, but for now the war has been successfully marketed as a financial freebie. Leave it to the next generation to wake up and discover that this war, which in constant dollars has already cost more than the Korean or Vietnam wars, prevents Congress from implementing any of the needed domestic programs, even those advocated by both parties, as was the children's health insurance bill vetoed by Bush last week. But even if you think none of that domestic spending is needed, even for fixing Medicare and Social Security, the cost of this war will require a substantial increase in taxes over coming decades.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates the future additional costs of these wars over the next 10 years at between $481 billion and $1.01 trillion, depending on how fast the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are wound down. Those are extremely optimistic projections that assume these wars will wind down and that the U.S. will be able to finally climb out of the quagmire. Much more likely is the spread of those wars to neighboring battle theaters in Pakistan and Iran. And that's without conjuring up the prospect of WWIII, as Bush did last week.

Understand further that all of the numbers referenced above pertain only to that part of the defense budget directly attributable to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Post-9/11 defense spending, excluding the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, has seen a 40 percent increase for building high-tech Cold War-era weapons in a charade that assumes that stateless terrorists present a military challenge even greater than the once mighty Soviet armed forces. The $686 billion overall 2008 defense budget is the highest since World War II.

There was a time when responsible politicians would decry this looting of the public treasury, but not now, when we are in the midst of a never-ending "war on terror." Not now, when a Marine dies a needless death in Iraq, a country that had nothing whatsoever to do with 9/11, or in any substantiated way presented a threat to the United States, and his family can be produced as cover for a president determined to morally and financially bankrupt the nation.

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Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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The rubber stamp Dems
Posted by: may261989 on Oct 24, 2007 7:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You almost have to admire Bush . Whatever shock hit his system after losing control of Congress must have quickly been replaced by the wellworn self serving bravado at the realisation that these Dems are simply too spineless to stand up to him. He knows that all he has to do is utter the magic words: "support the troops" and the Dems will roll over and beg for mercy.
I'm getting sick of constant emails from Pelosi and Reids office declaring "we are not giving up". Hell you guys gave up the moment you took over.
Pathetic.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

starving americans services at home.
Posted by: annm on Oct 25, 2007 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this spending on war MUST stop. it serves no purpose except bringing more death and mayhem.

a very sad comment on what this is doing to the american people was a lady commenting on tv after her house was destroyed in the californian fires, "they couldn't send a fire engine. they said they didn't have enough money to buy a fire engine for our area". this from what is supposed to be the richest country in the world!!

peace

annm

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Nothing left in the piggybank
Posted by: Democritus on Oct 25, 2007 5:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bush team's frontal assault on Social Security failed, even after they spent our huge budget surplus on tax cuts for the rich. Now there's a different plan afoot to dismantle all our social programs, a hint of which was given with Bush's veto of the SCHIP. There's just not enough money to pay $35 billion dollars to insure poor children's health, said our president, wanting to sound relevant. After all, there's a war to fight that will exceed $1 trillion.

This tactic augurs ill for all other social programs. The endless wars in Afghanistan and Iraq will suck up all our taxes, along with all the money we borrow from China and Japan, so that when it comes time to shore up Social Security for the baby boomers, we would have to raise taxes to do it! This, of course, is anathema to Bush and his ilk, and so, as Grover Norquist so nicely put it, we will simply have to strangle Social Security along with Medicare, Medicaid, and all those other social programs that benefit seniors, children, veterans, and others who have ceased to add to corporate wealth.

What the visionaries who pull Bush's strings will then enjoy is a country whose taxes go only to feeding its war machine, with the profits going to defense contractors, big oil, and big pharma. If we're lucky, maybe a few crumbs will fall off the table--that's if we continue working two or three jobs to catch those crumbs. Wecome to the Dystopian States of America.

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25ghostcommander
Posted by: 25ghostcommander on Oct 25, 2007 7:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The illegal Fascist Bus/Cheney mis-administration supported by the brown shirt rubber stamping GOP, the RNC and all of it's minions, and pseudo journalists have engineered "The Largest Robbery In History" of taxpayer dollars by using the Iraq War as a smokescreen. Your childrren and grand children will be the ones that have to pay for this Fraud. A single vote for any Fake Republican is one vote too many!

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Not only is the $46 billion request an abomination while human needs go unmet, it is inflationary.
Posted by: yellow on Oct 25, 2007 9:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The spending for the war, which could go to supply every uninsured American with health insurence for a long time, is also quite inflationary. The US military budget plus the amount of war spending up to this point has more than doubled the annual amount of the most liquid portion of the US domestic money supply or what is commonly referred to as M1. M1 has been just under $1.4 trillion since the beginning of the jobless recovery in late 2001. This part of the money supply is cash in circulation plus demand deposits like checking accounts and short term or overnight repurchase agreements with private commercial banks. The effect has been pent up inflation since Bush first came into office. The unprecedented overseas military spending also floods the world with inflated, unwanted dollars which have to be recycled back home or face devaluation on international exchange markets which also cause inflationary pressures in the US domestic market. This flood of dollars in circulation is matched by no commensurate consumer goods and services production to soak up these dollars. Thus, we create the very conditions of price inflation.

The next step if for international investors to dump their dollar denominated portfolios for the Euro or the Pound Sterling. Then look out below!!

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Why?
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Oct 25, 2007 11:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why must we withdraw for good or ill?

Simple. We have a record debt. We've had that record debt for a couple years.. and it has been growing the whole time. We aren't getting anything for our money.. and even if we were, quite soon we will reach a tipping point where our spending causes our economy to self-destruct. We must pull out... or we will destroy our nation. It is as simple as that.

Bush wants permanent tax cuts for the wealthy.. and wants people to believe he can just "trim the fat" on other forms of spending to make up for this. Not going to happen. There isn't enough fat.. even taking Bush's loose definition (fat being, for him, anything that doesn't serve the wealthy.. you know.. education aid, health care, feeding the poor, actual job training subsidies .. not to be confused with paying McDonalds and other huge corporations millions a year to provide no real job experience for employees).

The ship of state is being run into an iceberg known as Iraq.

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» RE: Why? Posted by: donl51
» RE: Why? Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com
Cost of Bushies War,
Posted by: donl51 on Oct 25, 2007 12:23 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Due to its excessive cost,which I question,a lot of sick,poor children in desperate need of med. attention won't have it, so pray tell wheres Bush getting the money to help w/californias state of emergeny he promised? so far its been property loss w/unfortunately one couple and a lot of pets those people have no responsibility to own, Houses are insured!..firemen get paychecks...lotta real rich people live in those areas!......or is that another empty promse like katrina

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Spending money...
Posted by: aka_bozo on Oct 25, 2007 4:31 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How funny to watch Socialists and Fascists accuse each other of spending money foolishly! Sure is fun to have just two parties.

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Be Afraid...
Posted by: guybjones on Oct 26, 2007 4:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone else seen those decidedly creepy Boeing ads on TV? There's a line in there where an actor or employee says something to the effect of "we make the tools that defend freedom." It's designed to get one all patriotic and warm and fuzzy inside, but I come away from it with a different set of emotions.

WHen the military industrial complex starts advertising on TV, it's way past time to start worrying. They're not even hiding their agenda anymore. A top Boeing arms executive a few months ago warned about trying to secure a "peace dividend;" there's no attempt at subtlety anymore. Read here:

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/65624.html

A few years ago, Northrop-Grumman was running ads on WQXR, New York CIty's classical music station. I thought it was such an odd scenario - I mean, why would they advertise on such a place? United Technologies also has run radio ads featuring RObert Duvall, and , although not all of its subsidiaries are involved in defense contracting, a good deal of them are.

Look, 9/11 and the "war on terror" is the greatest post-Cold War boon for the military industrial complex. These companines are making a killing and will use all of their power and influence to perpetuate these conflicts as long as possible. I almost feel sorry for the oil industry; they got screwed in the whole Iraq deal; it's the defense contractors who are cleaning up.

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» RE: Be Afraid... Posted by: Chloe2005
thekidde
Posted by: thekidde on Oct 26, 2007 8:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The way to answer ALL requests for money from politicians is: "Not one penny more until all troops are out of Iraq!".

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thekidde
Posted by: thekidde on Oct 26, 2007 12:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not one more penny!!!

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Gimme a break!
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Oct 28, 2007 1:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are near completion of the largest embassy ever built in Baghdad's "green zone." It is bigger than the Vatican complex in Rome and will be staffed by 2200 or so dingbats. It will also have room on its campus for a permanent military installation to protect the diplomats in their pursuit of filthy oil lucre while roiling the masses to more bloodshed. Condi calls the Iraq fiasco a generational thing [30 years=one generation] and the entirety of the mullets seeking the presidency in this republic say "stay the course." Only Kucinich and Richardson have the integrity to get us out. Its all bullshit and the kettle of fish known as the American public is perfectly suited to being led by mullets that have over-stayed their three days without refrigeration and stink to the deepest depths of hell. Change? Gimme a break, play lotto and hope to win enough baht to get the hell outta here.

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Guns or Butter? (We've Chosen the Much More Expensive Guns)
Posted by: Jefferson's Guardian on Oct 31, 2007 6:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't it ironic?

Traditionally, the vast majority of conservatives claimed their preference laid with the GOP because that party was fiscally restrained and believed in less government spending and lower taxation -- policies not typically associated with the Democratic Party.

Now, ever since Reagan, GOP presidents have contributed more to the national debt than any Democratic administration -- before, or since. They're no longer the party known for spending restraint.

Granted, the unabashed will tell you that their spending was for "national defense", so somehow that makes it different and palatable, and they got the lower taxes, too, which makes it a bargain in their eyes.

Here's what I never hear them concede, and it's really an easy premise to understand -- you either pay now (through higher taxes) or you pay later (through much higher taxes, to service the debt; and higher inflation).

Where do they think the money will come from to service this war-machine?

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